The pragmatic information content is the information content received by a recipient; it is focused on the recipient and defined in contrast to
Claude Shannon's information definition, which focuses on the message. The pragmatic information measures the information received, not the information contained in the message. Pragmatic information theory requires not only a model of the sender and how it encodes information, but also a model of the receiver and how it acts on the information received. The determination of pragmatic information content is a precondition for the determination of the
value of information. Claude Shannon and
Warren Weaver completed the viewpoint on information encoding in the seminal paper by Shannon
A Mathematical Theory of Communication, with two additional viewpoints (B and C): • A. How accurately can the symbols that encode the message be transmitted ("the technical problem")? • B. How precisely do the transmitted symbols convey the desired meaning("the semantics problem")? • C. How effective is the received message in changing conduct ("the effectiveness problem")? Pragmatics of communication is the observable effect a communication act (here receiving a message) has on the actions of the recipient. The pragmatic information content of a message may be different for different recipients or the same message may have the same content. Weizsäcker used the concept of
novelty and
irrelevance to separate information which is pragmatically useful or not. More recently,
Weinberger formulated a quantitative theory of pragmatic information. In contrast to standard information theory that says nothing about the semantic content of information, Weinberger's theory attempts to measure the amount of information actually used in making a decision. Included in
Weinberger's paper is a demonstration that his version of pragmatic information increases over the course of time in a simple model of evolution known as the
quasispecies model. This is demonstrably
not true for the standard measure of information. The acquisition of the information and the use of it in decision making can be separated. The use of acquired information to make a decision is, in the general case, an optimization in an uncertain situation (which is included in Weinberger's theory). For deterministc rule based decisions, the agent can be formalized as an
algebra with a set of operations and the state changes when these operations are executed (no optimization applied). The pragmatic information such an agent picks up from a messages is the transformation of the tokens in the message into operations the recipient is capable of. == Measuring the pragmatic information content with an agent-model of the receiver ==